







FoxV wrote:Basically the great depression all over again except the US is the Weimer republic of the 21st Century.



nth wrote:US may owe a lot, but US investors have more than enough money to cover all foreign-owned debt plus more.

FoxV wrote:The big question would be then how would the governement get this money moving after a serious stock crash (DOW at 3000-5000) and a good round of bank and bond collapses after those ARMs show their true colours (risk)


FoxV wrote:it'll be really interesting to see how the government would instigate that solution (Tax investors? Have you gone mad?)
However you are right, as much as I would bemoan US financial irresponsiblility, they do have a hell of a lot of money down there (although a good chuck of it in ficticious paper).
The big question would be then how would the governement get this money moving after a serious stock crash (DOW at 3000-5000) and a good round of bank and bond collapses after those ARMs show their true colours (risk)
After all this crap shakes itself out, investors will be gun shy for years to come

nth wrote:After 1929 stock crash, US has been pretty good at manageing stock crashes. Stock crash in itself is not that bad, but what it can lead is what is dangerous. Depending on what cause this future crash, US may or may not be able to handle it

nth wrote:
Mortgage collapse has been experienced before. US seems to survive those quite well.

firestarter wrote:
I wouldn't be as sanguine this time around, however, in that the expansion (bubble) is quite a bit larger than the fundamentals would support, not to mention the weakness we encounter now internally (economic emasculation, especially in the manufacturing sector) vis a vis Asia, and globalization in general.

nth wrote:firestarter wrote:
I wouldn't be as sanguine this time around, however, in that the expansion (bubble) is quite a bit larger than the fundamentals would support, not to mention the weakness we encounter now internally (economic emasculation, especially in the manufacturing sector) vis a vis Asia, and globalization in general.
I don't feel you understand what happen historically when the last real estate collapse.

But with China expanding how can growth be throttled? Given that we are going to fall in the direction of growth I'm vaguely expecting a tightening of the money supply and more unemployment.China presents stagflation dilemma (link)
Sizzling economy pushes up oil and commodity prices
By Ko Kyoung-tae
...skip...
As the sizzling economy has increasingly guzzled crude oil and commodities in recent years, China is clearly beginning to ship inflation risks abroad.
Its soaring demand for a wide array of consumer products is also pushing up retail prices from New York to Seoul, posing challenges to the world's central bankers.
Such inflation risks are mounting even amid a global economic slowdown, which puts inflation fighters within a well-known economic dilemma between stable prices and higher growth. The Korean economy is running into similar difficulties.



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